You can find full details of our events in the calendar on the right and in our downloadable programme. Please note that these events may be cancelled at short notice and we will try to post details on the homepage if possible. For more details regarding the LNHS field meetings please see the Field Meetings page.
The LNHS also has indoor ID sessions and a regular Virtual Natural History Talk series.
The LNHS events programme is one of the most varied and active of a natural history society. Its meetings encourage the interaction of beginners and experienced naturalists.
LNHS Field Meetings are field recorder days or guided walks. Lunch and Tea should be brought on all whole-day meetings. You do not need to have a car - where the programme says 'cars needed' this is to remind drivers they will need to pick up people at the station or meeting point. At meetings involving cars, those receiving lifts are expected to contribute to the cost of petrol used. Unfortunately, due to the nature of the LNHS Field Meetings, no dogs are allowed except for guide dogs.
The LNHS Virtual Natural History Talks series began in 2020 and cover topics including (but not limited to) ecology, identification, recording and conservation, and in a variety of groups including birds, mammals, flowering plants, fungi, bryophytes, reptiles and amphibians, and a range of invertebrate groups.
These usually consist of talks, slide shows or discussions. Indoor meetings are held at several venues:
Most terrestrial animals naturally accumulate electrostatic charges, meaning that they will generate electric forces that interact with other charges in their environment, including those on or within other organisms. Join us on a journey through the often unnoticed ecological role of static electricity in nature. Dr Sam England will discuss how electrostatic forces attract pollen onto butterflies and moths, allowing them to be more efficient pollinators; how the charge of tick hosts like cows, dogs, and humans, pulls ticks across air gaps to make them better parasites; and finally how many insects can detect static electricity, and use it to sense the approach of their predators.
Dr Sam J. England first studied for a Masters degree in Physics with Australian Study at the University of Exeter, UK and the University of Wollongong, Australia. Then, he moved into the biological realm, working with Prof Daniel Robert on electrostatic ecology and completing his PhD in Biological Sciences at the University of Bristol, UK in 2023, where he won the award for best PhD thesis in the faculty. Currently, Sam is a postdoctoral researcher at the Museum of Natural History in Berlin, Germany, working with Dr Lauren Sumner-Rooney on the eyes and other senses of spiders.
This annual lecture is delivered by the British Entomological & Natural History Society and London Natural History Society as a joint venture in memory of Charles Bradwin Ashby (1920 - 1994). Brad was a prominent member of both organisations and in 1985 he proposed the joint meetings which have successfully continued to this day, and since 2020 have been in a virtual format.
This online event is being supported by the Biological Recording Company. It is free to attend and open to all, however, booking is essential: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/electric-ecology-how-invertebrates-capitalise-on-static-electricity-tickets-1111832162929